Punk Rock Girls, an 11-film survey of cinema’s toughest she-rockers, May 7—Jun 1 Opens with a sneak preview of Lukas Moodysson’s



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BAMcinématek presents Punk Rock Girls, an 11-film survey of cinema’s toughest she-rockers,

May 7—Jun 1
Opens with a sneak preview of Lukas Moodysson’s We Are The Best! with Moodysson in person
Director Susan Seidelman in person for screenings of Smithereens_,_and_director_Slava_Tsukerman_at_Liquid_Sky__The_Wall_Street_Journal'>Desperately Seeking Susan and Smithereens, and director Slava Tsukerman at Liquid Sky
The Wall Street Journal is the title sponsor for BAMcinématek and BAM Rose Cinemas.
Brooklyn, NY/Apr 18, 2014—From Wednesday, May 7 through Sunday, June 1, BAMcinématek presents Punk Rock Girls, an 11-film survey of cinema’s toughest she-rockers. To mark the release of Lukas Moodysson’s (Show Me Love, Lilya 4-Ever) punk rock valentine, We Are the Best!, BAMcinématek pays homage to the fearless, mohawk-sporting, safety pin-wearing, guitar-wielding women who stick it to The Man.
Opening the series on Wednesday, May 7 is a sneak preview of We Are the Best!, in which three rebellious Stockholm tween girls start a punk band. Adapted from a graphic novel by the director’s wife, the film premiered at Toronto last year and simultaneously “captures the DIY empowerment of punk rock, the bond of female friendships, and parodies the era’s Oi!-scenester stances all in one blissful swoop” (David Fear, The Village Voice). Moodysson will appear in person for a Q&A following the screening. We Are the Best! is a Magnolia Pictures release and opens May 30.
Diane Lane, Laura Dern, and Marin Kanter play another trio of teen punk girls in Lou Adler’s Ladies and Gentlemen, The Fabulous Stains (1982—May 31), which screenwriter Nancy Dowd (Coming Home, Slap Shot) was inspired to write after attending her first Ramones show. A play on Rolling Stones concert movie Ladies and Gentlemen: The Rolling Stones, the film features cameos by former Sex Pistols Steve Jones and Paul Cook and The Clash’s Paul Simonon, and is a favorite of Courtney Love, Jon Bon Jovi, and underground filmmaker Sarah Jacobson. Two 14-year-old runaways form punk duo the Sleaze Sisters in the proto-riot-grrrl, grimy 70s New York-set Times Square (1980—May 21), the sophomore feature by Allan Moyle (Pump Up the Volume) which Kathleen Hanna of Bikini Kill and Le Tigre has cited as her favorite film. Featuring Tim Curry as the Sleaze Sisters’ DJ promoter, Times Square also boasts a soundtrack of hits from The Cure, Ramones, Talking Heads, Patti Smith, Lou Reed, The Pretenders, XTC, and Gary Numan, among others.
Among the highlights of Punk Rock Girls are Derek Jarman’s Jubilee (1978—May 30 & 31), featuring cameos by Siouxsie Sioux, Ari Up of The Slits, and Adam Ant, plus a score by Brian Eno; Brian Gibson’s post-punk feature debut Breaking Glass (1980—May 14); Dennis Hopper’s Out of the Blue (1981—May 22), “a movie that crashes a sense of working-class reality into punk nihilism and an appreciation of the absurd…ripe for rediscovery” (Michael Almereyda, Film Comment); Slava Tsukerman’s seminal Liquid Sky (1982—May 30), a major influence on electroclash featuring Tsukerman in person; Gillian Armstrong’s Aussie musical Starstruck (1982—May 15) screening in a rare imported 35mm print; and Harry Elfont and Deborah Kaplan’s surprisingly subversive Josie and the Pussycats (2001—May 29), starring Rachael Leigh Cook, Tara Reid, and Rosario Dawson. The series also includes the shorts program Popularity is So Boring (May

29) with films by No Wavers Scott B and Beth B and Cinema of Transgression filmmaker Richard Kern as well as music videos by seminal Swiss punkers Kleenex/LiLiPUT.


Closing the series on Sunday, June 1 is a Susan Seidelman double bill of her debut feature Smithereens (1982), about a wannabe punk rocker who latches onto a washed up one-hit wonder (played by full-time punk Richard Hell); and Desperately Seeking Susan (1985), a reimagining of Jacques Rivette’s Celine and Julie Go Boating in 80s New York with Madonna as “an indolent, trampy goddess” (Pauline Kael, The New Yorker). Seidelman will appear in person to introduce both films.
For press information, please contact:
Lisa Thomas at 718.724.8023 /
lthomas@BAM.org

Hannah Thomas at 718.724.8002 / hthomas@BAM.org
Punk Rock Girls Schedule
Wed, May 7

7:30pm*: We Are the Best!


Wed, May 14

7, 9:30pm: Breaking Glass


Thu, May 15

7, 9:30pm: Starstruck


Wed, May 21

7, 9:30pm: Times Square


Thu, May 22

7, 9:15pm: Out of the Blue


Thu, May 29

4:30, 9pm: Josie and the Pussycats

7pm: Popularity is So Boring: Punk Shorts
Fri, May 30

2, 7pm**: Liquid Sky

4:30, 9:30pm: Jubilee
Sat, May 31

4:30, 9:30pm: Ladies and Gentlemen,The Fabulous Stains

7pm: Jubilee
Sun, Jun 1

2, 7pm***: Desperately Seeking Susan

4:30***, 9:30pm: Smithereens
*Q&A with director Lukas Moodysson

**Intro by director Slava Tsukerman

***Director Susan Seidelman in person
Film Descriptions

All films in 35mm unless otherwise noted.
Breaking Glass (1980) 104min

Directed by Brian Gibson. With Hazel O'Connor, Phil Daniels, Jon Finch, Jonathan Pryce.

The seminal British post-punk scene provides the backdrop of this showbiz saga of rocking out vs. selling out. Frizz-haired New Waver Kate (O’Connor)—clad variously in Kabuki makeup and luminescent robot suit—faces that age-old conundrum: go mainstream, or stay true to her anti-establishment roots? This blistering transmission from late-70s England captures the era’s nonconformist spirit, outré fashion, and simmering political tension.



Wed, May 14 at 7, 9:30pm
Desperately Seeking Susan (1985) 104min

Directed by Susan Seidelman. With Rosanna Arquette, Madonna, Aidan Quinn.

A bump on the head and a case of amnesia leads a vanilla Jersey housewife (Arquette) to take on the persona of a Lower East Side-dwelling hipster (“Like a Virgin”-era Madonna) who’s being pursued by killers. Susan Seidelman’s goofball take on Rivette’s Celine and Julie Go Boating is a spirited slice of retro 80s cool featuring cameos from downtown mainstays John Turturro, Richard Hell, John Lurie, and more.



Sun, Jun 1 at 2, 7pm
Josie and the Pussycats (2001) 98min

Directed by Harry Elfont and Deborah Kaplan. With Rachael Leigh Cook, Tara Reid, Rosario Dawson.

Josie (Cook) and her Pussycats (Reid & Dawson) go from garage rock wannabes to pre-fab pop-stars, thanks to the engineering of a diabolical record industry exec. Plastered with ironic corporate logos, this candy-colored satire of 90s teenybopper culture “winningly channels the spirit of Frank Tashlin… A sly, sustained spoof of consumerism, infectious pop songs, and cute girls in tight pants” (Nathan Rabin, The A.V. Club).



Thu, May 29 at 4:30, 9pm
Jubilee (1978) 106min

Directed by Derek Jarman. With Jenny Runacre, Nell Campbell, Toyah Willcox.

“As long as the music’s loud enough, we won’t hear the world falling apart.” Queen Elizabeth I (Runacre) gets zapped to late-70s England, a post-punk apocalyptic nightmare in which distaff anarcho-freaks run amok in a decaying landscape of urban ultra-violence. Derek Jarman’s nihilist anti-comedy features a Brian Eno score and appearances from punk pioneers Siouxsie and the Banshees, the Slits, and Adam Ant—plus cinema’s most disturbing use of ketchup. DCP.



Fri, May 30 at 4:30, 9:30pm

Sat, May 31 at 7pm

Ladies and Gentlemen,The Fabulous Stains (1982) 87min

Directed by Lou Adler. With Diane Lane, Laura Dern, Marin Kanter.

Seventeen-year-old orphan Corinne (Lane) chucks her job flipping burgers, discovers eyeliner, and becomes a counterculture icon as Third Degree, frontwoman for the eponymous skunk-haired garage girl-band whose motto is “We don't put out.” This brash and bratty music industry satire boasts a super-group of punk rock royalty, with members of The Clash and The Sex Pistols jamming together as “The Looters.”



Sat, May 31 at 4:30, 9:30pm
Liquid Sky (1982) 112min

Directed by Slava Tsukerman. With Anne Carlisle, Paula E. Sheppard, Susan Doukas.

This startling sci-fi New Wave vision of New York City follows a team of invisible aliens as they descend upon Earth looking for drugs and land in an apartment inhabited by a drug dealer and his androgynous lover. Starring and co-written by the magnetic Anne Carlisle, this cult classic is a riot of color and perversion.



Fri, May 30 at 2, 7pm
Out of the Blue (1980) 94min

Directed by Dennis Hopper. With Linda Manz, Dennis Hopper.

Just out of prison for drunk-driving his truck into a school bus, bad dad Don (Hopper) returns home to the planet’s most messed up family: a smack-addict wife and a self-destructive rebel-punk daughter (Manz), whose mantra is “disco sucks, kill all hippies.” Dennis Hopper’s hurricane-force domestic tragedy is the 80s answer to Easy Rider; it follows troubled youth subculture to its frightening, screaming, self-annihilating extreme.



Thu, May 22 at 7, 9:15pm
Popularity is So Boring: Punk Shorts

Riot grrrls, queer punks, and No Wave icons fly their freak flags in this shorts program, featuring films by downtown shock artists Richard Kern and Scott and Beth B, as well as Kleenex/LiLiPUT videos. Among the highlights are Kern’s You Killed Me First, starring downtown muse Lung Leg (cover girl for Sonic Youth’s 1986 album EVOL), and Black Box, a visual and auditory assault about torture and mind control featuring underground musician Lydia Lunch and artist Kiki Smith. Digital.



Thu, May 29 at 7pm
Smithereens (1982) 89min

Directed by Susan Seidelman. With Susan Berman, Brad Rijn, Richard Hell.

Talentless but determined Jersey girl Wren (Berman) moves to the East Village with dreams of joining the punk rock scene, opportunistically latching onto anyone who can help her get ahead, including rocker Eric (punk godfather Richard Hell). Seidelman’s first film is a gloriously gritty time capsule of 1980s lower Manhattan, perfectly complimented by a jittery, bristling-with-energy soundtrack by The Feelies.



Sun, Jun 1 at 4:30, 9:30pm
Starstruck (1982) 105min

Directed by Gillian Armstrong. With Jo Kennedy, Ross O'Donovan.

This awesomely 80s Aussie musical follows Jackie (Kennedy), an eager punk rocker with a song in her heart and dreams of hitting it big. Director Gillian Armstrong’s follow-up to My Brilliant Career offers a bonanza of kooky delights, including a kangaroo-suit-clad Jackie, a Busby Berkeley-meets-New Wave musical number involving inflatable plastic sharks, and a grand finale at the Sydney Opera House.



Thu, May 15 at 7, 9:30pm
Times Square (1980) 111min

Directed by Allan Moyle. With Trini Alvarado, Robin Johnson.

Problem teens Pamela (Alvarado) and Nicky (Johnson) bust out of a mental institution and go straight through the looking glass into the good-bad old days of Koch-era New York City, a grimy wonderland wherein they hurl TV sets from windows, hijack a radio station, and achieve underground-hero status as the garbage bag-clad, bandit-masked punk rock duo the Sleez Sisters. This cult/queer/riot grrrl classic is “a Wizard of Oz for the '80s” (Time Out London).



Wed, May 21 at 7, 9:30pm
We Are the Best! (2014) 102min

Directed by Lukas Moodysson. With Mira Barkhammer, Mira Grosin, Liv LeMoyne.

Three 13-year-old girls find salvation in punk rock in this infectious ode to youthful rebellion from Together and Lilya 4-Ever director Lukas Moodysson. An affectionate, retro-fantastic time capsule of early-1980s Sweden, the film follows the spiky-haired trio as they fight the system one shambolic, three-chord anthem at a time, all building up to an exuberant, fist-pumping finale. DCP. Sneak preview courtesy Magnolia Pictures.



Wed, May 7 at 7:30pm
About BAMcinématek

The four-screen BAM Rose Cinemas (BRC) opened in 1998 to offer Brooklyn audiences alternative and independent films that might not play in the borough otherwise, making BAM the only performing arts center in the country with two mainstage theaters and a multiplex cinema. In July 1999, beginning with a series celebrating the work of Spike Lee, BAMcinématek was born as Brooklyn’s only daily, year-round repertory film program. BAMcinématek presents new and rarely seen contemporary films, classics, work by local artists, and festivals of films from around the world, often with special appearances by directors, actors, and other guests. BAMcinématek has not only presented major retrospectives by major filmmakers such as Michelangelo Antonioni, Manoel de Oliveira, Shohei Imamura, Vincente Minnelli (winning a National Film Critics’ Circle Award prize for the retrospective), Kaneto Shindo, Luchino Visconti, and William Friedkin, but it has also introduced New York audiences to contemporary artists such as Pedro Costa and Apichatpong Weerasethakul. In addition, BAMcinématek programmed the first US retrospectives of directors Arnaud Desplechin, Nicolas Winding Refn, Hong Sang-soo, and, most recently, Andrzej Zulawski. From 2006 to 2008, BAMcinématek partnered with the Sundance Institute and in June 2009 launched BAMcinemaFest, a 16-day festival of new independent films and repertory favorites with 15 NY feature film premieres; the fifth annual BAMcinemaFest runs from June 18—29, 2014.


Credits
The Wall Street Journal is the title sponsor of BAM Rose Cinemas and BAMcinématek.
Steinberg Screen at the BAM Harvey Theater is made possible by The Joseph S. and Diane H. Steinberg Charitable Trust.
Pepsi is the official beverage of BAM.
Brooklyn Brewery is the preferred beer of BAMcinématek.
BAM Rose Cinemas are named in recognition of a major gift in honor of Jonathan F.P. and Diana Calthorpe Rose. BAM Rose Cinemas would also like to acknowledge the generous support of The Peter Jay Sharp Foundation, The Estate of Richard B. Fisher, Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams, Brooklyn Delegation of the New York City Council, New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, New York State Council on the Arts, Bloomberg, and Time Warner Inc. Additional support for BAMcinématek is provided by the Coolidge Corner Theatre Foundation, The Grodzins Fund, The Liman Foundation and Summit Rock Advisors.
BAMcinématek is programmed by Nellie Killian and David Reilly with assistance from Jesse Trussell. Additional programming by Ryan Werner. Punk Rock Girls is programmed with assistance from Rachel Fernandes.
Special thanks to John Alan Simon; Beth B, Richard Kern, Slava Tsukerman; Charles Slaats/National Film and Sound Archive of Australia; David Elfick/Palm Beach Pictures, James King/British Film Institute; Judy Nicaud/Paramount Pictures; Matt Jones/UNC School of the Arts; Paul Ginsburg/Universal; Brian Belovarac/Janus Films; Chris Chouinard/Park Circus.
General Information
BAM Howard Gilman Opera House, BAM Rose Cinemas, and BAMcafé are located in the Peter Jay Sharp building at 30 Lafayette Avenue (between St Felix Street and Ashland Place) in the Fort Greene neighborhood of Brooklyn. BAM Harvey Theater is located two blocks from the main building at 651 Fulton Street (between Ashland and Rockwell Places). Both locations house Greenlight Bookstore at BAM kiosks. BAM Fisher, located at 321 Ashland Place, is the newest addition to the BAM campus and houses the Judith and Alan Fishman Space and Rita K. Hillman Studio. BAM Rose Cinemas is Brooklyn’s only movie house dedicated to first-run independent and foreign film and repertory programming. BAMcafé, operated by Great Performances, offers a bar menu and dinner entrées prior to BAM Howard Gilman Opera House evening performances. BAMcafé also features an eclectic mix of spoken word and live music for BAMcafé Live on Friday and Saturday nights with a bar menu available starting at 6pm.
Subway:           2, 3, 4, 5, Q, B to Atlantic Avenue – Barclays Center (2, 3, 4, 5 to Nevins St for Harvey Theater)

D, N, R to Pacific Street; G to Fulton Street; C to Lafayette Avenue

Train:                Long Island Railroad to Atlantic Terminal – Barclays Center

Bus:                 B25, B26, B41, B45, B52, B63, B67 all stop within three blocks of BAM



Car:                  Commercial parking lots are located adjacent to BAM
For ticket information, call BAM Ticket Services at 718.636.4100, or visit BAM.org.

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